Beyond leaf habit generalities in plant function across 97 tropical dry forest tree species

• Leaf habit has been hypothesized to define a linkage between the slow-fast plant economic spectrum and the drought resistance-avoidance trade-off in tropical forests (‘slow-safe vs fast-risky’). However, variation in hydraulic traits as a function of leaf habit has rarely been explored for a large...

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Published inThe New phytologist Vol. 232; no. 1; pp. 148 - 161
Main Authors Vargas G., German, Brodribb, Tim J., Dupuy, Juan M., González-M., Roy, Hulshof, Catherine M., Medvigy, David, Allerton, Tristan A. P., Pizano, Camila, Salgado-Negret, Beatriz, Schwartz, Naomi B., Van Bloem, Skip J., Waring, Bonnie G., Powers, Jennifer S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Lancaster Wiley 01.10.2021
Wiley Subscription Services, Inc
Wiley-Blackwell
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Summary:• Leaf habit has been hypothesized to define a linkage between the slow-fast plant economic spectrum and the drought resistance-avoidance trade-off in tropical forests (‘slow-safe vs fast-risky’). However, variation in hydraulic traits as a function of leaf habit has rarely been explored for a large number of species. • We sampled leaf and branch functional traits of 97 tropical dry forest tree species from four sites to investigate whether patterns of trait variation varied consistently in relation to leaf habit along the ‘slow-safe vs fast-risky’ trade-off. • Leaf habit explained from 0% to 43.69% of individual trait variation. We found that evergreen and semi-deciduous species differed in their location along the multivariate trait ordination when compared to deciduous species. While deciduous species showed consistent trait values, evergreen species trait values varied as a function of the site. Last, trait values varied in relation to the proportion of deciduous species in the plant community. • We found that leaf habit describes the strategies that define drought avoidance and plant economics in tropical trees. However, leaf habit alone does not explain patterns of trait variation, which suggests quantifying site-specific or species-specific uncertainty in trait variation as the way forward.
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USDOE
ISSN:0028-646X
1469-8137
1469-8137
DOI:10.1111/nph.17584